Anderson v. Board of Commissioners

125 P. 188, 22 Idaho 190, 1912 Ida. LEXIS 14
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 125 P. 188 (Anderson v. Board of Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Board of Commissioners, 125 P. 188, 22 Idaho 190, 1912 Ida. LEXIS 14 (Idaho 1912).

Opinion

AILSHIE, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the district court issuing a writ of mandate against the board of commissioners of Lemhi county, directing them to issue a liquor license to the plaintiff, William Anderson, authorizing him to sell intoxicating liquors within the corporate limits of Salmon City.

This appeal involves the question as to whether or not a board of county commissioners have the power or discretion, under sec. 1508 of the Rev. Codes, to reject an application for a liquor license where the application is made for a license to sell intoxicating liquors within the boundaries of an incorporated city. The board of commissioners took the position that they had a right under the statute to exercise their judgment and discretion in the matter of issuing a liquor license, [195]*195whether for the sale of intoxicating liquors within or without an incorporated city. The district judge, on the other hand, held that they have no such right or discretion where the application is made for the sale of liquor's within the boundaries of an incorporated city.

See. 1507 of the Bev. Codes provides that all applications for license to sell intoxicating liquors “must be made to the board of county commissioners of the county wherein it is proposed to sell such liquor, at least twenty days before the meeting at which said application shall be acted upon, and said application shall specify the precinct within which such place of sale is to be located, and said application may be granted or rejected by said board as hereinafter provided.”

Sec. 1508 of the Bev. Codes provides that before any license shall issue “the applicant shall produce before such board the receipt of the sheriff, showing that he has paid into his hands the amount due for such license, and shall execute and deliver to said board his bond to the state of Idaho, which bond shall be in the penal sum of three thousand dollars,” etc. Sec. 1508 closes with the following proviso:

“That when application is made for the sale, of intoxicating liquors, as in this section provided, for a place outside of any incorporated city, either upon their own motion or upon objections duly filed upon the part of any citizen and resident of the precinct within which it is intended to carry on such sale, the county commissioners shall determine whether or not the granting of such license will be conducive to the best interests of the community in which such saloon or business is proposed to be established, and whether or not such applicant is a fit person to have such license and carry on said business, and whether or not such place ,of sale and business will likely be conducted in a quiet, orderly and peaceable manner, and should said board of county commissioners determine adversely to the applicant upon any grounds above specified, the license must be refused and the sheriff shall return the amount deposited to said applicant; otherwise the said license may be granted; and such order of the board of county commissioners [196]*196shall be subject to appeal to the district court as in the case of other orders of said board.”

It is upon the construction of the foregoing proviso to see. 1508 that the respondent herein seeks to sustain and uphold the action of the district court in ruling that the board has no discretion in the matter of issuing a license for the sale of intoxicating liquors within the boundaries of an incorporated city. It is argued that since this proviso authorizes and directs the board of commissioners, either upon their own motion or upon the objection of any citizen, to investigate and determine whether or not the granting of a license outside of any incorporated city “will be conducive to the best interests of the community in which such saloon or business is proposed to be established, and whether or not such applicant is a fit person to have such license and carry on said business, and whether or not such place of sale and business will likely be conducted in a quiet, orderly and peaceable manner,” it was thereby intended that the board should have no such authority or discretion where the sale is intended to be made within <m incorporated city.

In construing this provision of the statute, it is necessary to bear in mind the status of the liquor business. It is not the exercise of any natural or inherent right or recognized lawful business. No one has an inherent or natural right to engage in the liquor traffic (State v. Calloway, 11 Ida. 719, 114 Am. St. 285, 84 Pac. 27, 4 L. R. A., N. S., 109; Gillesby v. Board of Commrs., 17 Ida. 586, 107 Pac. 71; Darby v. Pence, 17 Ida. 697, 107 Pac. 484, 27 L. R. A., N. S., 1194; Black on Intoxicating Liquors, sec. 48), and statutes authorizing the licensing of the liquor business and conferring the right on the licensee to sell a rut-traffic in intoxicating liquors must be read and construed in the light of a grant of authority rather than a limitation of natural right. In this respect it differs from the licensing of ordinary mercantile and manufacturing industries and enterprises or any ordinary commercial business. In this latter class of cases the right existed independent of and before any license or regulation was imposed upon it. In the liquor business the right did not exist here until it was con[197]*197ferred by statute. It follows, therefore, that one who seeks to establish the right to carry on the business of selling and disposing of intoxicating liquors must point out a clear and unmistakable grant by law to so engage in such business; otherwise, no such right exists. Here the law-making power has authorized the licensing of applicants to sell intoxicating liquors under certain regulations and restrictions and has said that such applications “may be granted or rejected by said board as hereinafter provided.” (Sec. 1507.) Nowhere else is there any provision restricting that power and discretion, but sec. 1508 provides the method of its exercise in cases where the sale is to be made- outside of incorporated cities. The law requires all applicants to file their applications at least twenty days before the meeting of the board at which they desire to have such applications acted upon. The question at once arises, why should an application “be acted upon” if the board have no alternative but to grant the application? The further inquiry arises, why should the application be made to the board at all, amd why should it be made twenty days before the meeting of the board, if the board has no discretion in the matter ?

This is followed by the provision that the application “may be granted or rejected by said board as hereinafter provided.” The only provisions following sec. 1507 with reference to the power and duty of the board in such matters are contained in sec. 1508 heretofore quoted, and the provisions of secs. 1512, 1513, and 1514. Sec.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 P. 188, 22 Idaho 190, 1912 Ida. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-board-of-commissioners-idaho-1912.